17/12/2025
🫶
Big brands will survive without you. Small business owners won’t.
This holiday season, I’m asking you to pause before buying gifts from another million or billion-peso brand that won’t even notice your purchase.
Look around instead.
That candle maker packing orders at 2 a.m. That small brand answering DMs themselves, praying sales cover rent, ingredients, payroll, and one decent night of sleep. This holiday season, if you’re buying desserts, pastries, or gifts that involve butter, sugar, and a lot of late nights…choose small bakers.
Choose the ones baking while the city sleeps. The ones measuring ingredients with tired hands and hopeful hearts. The ones who missed parties, skipped rest days, and burned through trial batches just to get one recipe perfect for you.
Small bakers aren’t factories. We don’t have machines doing the work or marketing teams selling a story we didn’t live. Every loaf, cookie, cake, and box of pastries passed through real hands. Real backs. Real exhaustion.
Ingredient prices keep going up. Butter, sugar, chocolate…everything costs more, but customers still expect old prices. Utilities are higher. Supplies are harder to replace. One broken mixer can mean panic, not inconvenience.
And still… we bake.
Behind every dessert is someone baking through the night, redoing batches because they weren’t right or up to our standards, pushing through exhaustion and anxiety just to deliver something beautiful and delicious. We miss rest. We miss gatherings. We miss time with our families. We carry pressure decorated with frosting, wrapped in a cardboard box paper and tied with a ribbon.
This season isn’t about perfection or fancy logos. It’s about intention. About choosing meaning over convenience. About gifting something made with care, not mass-produced apathy.
When you support a small business, your money doesn’t disappear into a corporate black hole. It pays real people. Real families. Real dreams that are hanging on by a thread, especially this year. When you choose a small baker, it lands directly into someone’s life.
It says: I see your effort.
It says: Your craft matters.
It says: You’re not alone in this.
Every order means more than people realize. Your order helps pay for ingredients. It keeps the lights on, the ovens hot. It buys time, hope, and another chance to keep going.
So please, I ask you, be kind. Stop asking for free tastes. Order early. Pay fairly. Don’t haggle prices over someone’s hard work. Don’t ask for discounts, our margins are already thin. Don’t ghost after asking for prices. Tag them. Buy their products. Even if you’re not buying, share their pages. Recommend them loudly. It tells someone, “Your work is worth it.” And if you’re a baker and can’t take any more orders, recommend a fellow baker who might need it.
This season, support small bakers. Support the people who show up, every day, to make your celebrations warmer and sweeter. Because behind every beautiful dessert is a tired baker who kept going anyway.
For us, this isn’t just the holidays. It’s survival.
*Please avoid copy pasting the text, just share or tag me as the original author. Much appreciated.
- J